
By George L. Spaeth
All physicians, including glaucoma specialists, seek to discover
the fundamental causes of an individual's disease. For it is only
when those causes have been identified that the most appropriate
treatment can begin.
Persons with glaucoma have suffered some kind of tissue damage,
frequently to the optic nerve. But knowing that the cause of glaucoma
is optic nerve damage does not provide the physician nearly enough
information. To initiate effective therapy requires knowing the
reason for the tissue damage, so that it can be prevented or lessened.
Optic Nerve Damage
Let's consider optic nerve damage in a little more detail. The
real questions that must be answered are, first, the general ones
posed to researchers: What is the exact nature of the optic nerve
damage characteristic of glaucoma? and What causes that damage?
Furthermore, the glaucoma specialist must try to answer questions
about individual patients: What is the exact nature of the optic
nerve damage in this individual? and What specifically has caused
that damage?
Of course, knowing the answers to the first questions is crucial
for answering the second and ultimately most important ones. This
means that research is vital for discovering the best treatment
for individuals with glaucoma.
The story of glaucoma research began about 150 years ago, when
Helmholtz invented an instrument that allowed looking inside the
eye. For the first time, investigators could see the inside of
eyes diagnosed with the newly-defined condition known as "glaucoma."
What they saw was that the nerve that leads from the back of the
eye into the brain, the optic nerve, was obviously damaged. Specifically,
the surface of the nerve, the so-called "optic disc,"
had a bowl-like depression.
Two Theories of Optic Nerve Damage
Some suggested that the observed depression was related to the
pressure of the aqueous humor, the fluid in the eye that keeps
it firm so that it can serve its purpose as an optical instrument.
It seemed reasonable that if the pressure of the aqueous on the
inside of the eye was too high, it might directly kill optic nerve
cells, leaving the bowl-like depression now often referred to
as "cupping."
This theory continues to be the most popular. And most treatments
for glaucoma aim in one way or another at lowering the pressure
inside the eye.
Even long ago, however, other investigators proposed that it
was not the direct pressure of the aqueous humor on the optic
nerve that damaged it. Rather, they argued, this pressure is a
problem mainly because it squeezes the blood vessels and thereby
reduces the flow of blood to the optic nerve. With insufficient
blood, the cells die, and when the cells die, they disappear,
leaving the characteristic bowl-like depression or cupping.
The Role of Blood Flow in Optic Nerve Damage
Now, for the first time, technology is helping researchers, including
those at the Glaucoma Service Foundation, understand the major
mechanisms by which the optic nerve becomes damaged in patients
with glaucoma. This is unquestionably one of the most exciting
fields of investigation in all of ophthalmology.
Over the past 20 years, a variety of investigators have performed
extensive studies, some of which have indicated that spasm of
the blood vessels that provide blood to the optic nerve may be
responsible for glaucoma in some patients. Some individuals, such
as those with migraine, are predisposed to this type of spasm.
It has been known for quite a few years that patients with migraine
are predisposed to "low-tension" glaucoma, that is,
glaucoma that has occurred even though the pressure inside the
eye is normal or even lower than normal.
Others have found other specific indications of abnormality of
blood flow in some patients with glaucoma. For example, it is
becoming apparent that blood pressure is an important factor in
determining whether or not optic nerve damage will progress in
a glaucomatous eye.
More recently, Alon Harris, a physiologist at the University
of Indiana specializing in blood-flow studies, working with one
of our ex-Fellows, Louis Cantor, and with George Spaeth and Bob
Sergott, who is in charge of the vascular laboratory at Wills
Eye Hospital, has used a new technology that permits visualization
of the blood vessels of the eye. Based on this technology, Dr.
Harris has presented a number of studies describing changes in
blood flow in the optic nerve in glaucoma and, for the first time,
reported different patterns of blood-flow abnormality in different
types of glaucoma.
Foundation researchers are actively studying this latter subject.
At the annual meeting of the Association for Research in Vision
and Ophthalmology, the most important annual meeting for presenting
eye research, they showed that lowering the pressure inside the
eye by surgery improved the blood flow in certain patients with
glaucoma. In another paper, they related the amount of damage
to the optic nerve in patients with glaucoma to the amount of
abnormality of blood flow.
The Future
While we now know a fair amount about the relationship between
blood flow in the eye and glaucoma, investigators have a long
way to go. We and others are in an exciting race to come up with
a comprehensive understanding of the various mechanisms by which
the optic nerve becomes damaged in glaucoma.
Once these are known, physicians will be in a far better position
to help each individual patient. As this new knowledge unfolds,
we will see very exciting changes resulting in significant improvements
in patient care.
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